Julius Hadrich

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Julius Hadrich (born December 16, 1891 in Pforzheim , † April 18, 1983 in Berlin ) was a German politician ( SPD ).

Hadrich passed his Abitur as the son of a jeweler and studied political science in Freiburg i. Br. , Bonn , Münster (Westf.) And Berlin . During the First World War he had to interrupt his studies and became a soldier. Hadrich graduated in 1920 with a degree in economics and then obtained his doctorate as Dr. rer. pole. He worked in the management of the Association of Doctors in Germany . From 1927 to 1933 he was a member of the Reich Party of German Middle Classes . In 1933 he was taken over by the Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians and became head of the statistical department there. In 1937 Hadrich was arrested and charged with “preparing for high treason”. He was arrested and taken to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp . In 1939 his proceedings were discontinued and he became the syndic of the "Reich Association of German Private Hospitals". In 1945 he became the Wehrmacht confiscated and then fell into American captivity .

After the Second World War , Hadrich became head of the secretariat of the trustees of the medical professional associations in September 1945 , and in the same year he also joined the SPD. From 1947 he was the syndic of various medical associations and from 1951 a freelance business advisor and writer . In the Berlin election in 1958 , Hadrich was elected to the Berlin House of Representatives, where he was the health policy spokesman for the SPD parliamentary group.

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